Reputation: 901
I'm using Dagger 2 and Kotlin for Android development. My project is also a multi-module project. My settings.gradle file is like this:
include :app
include :lib
I'm also maintaining the lib module.
In the Dagger Files (for example in the component), I try to get the item from other module. For example:
@Component
interface AppComponent{
fun getPresenter() : Presenter
}
The Presenter object is defined in lib module. I was working in linux environment and I'm using Android Studio 3 preview canary 5. The code is working well and I am able to generate APK.
But my company wanted to generate the APK using stable version of Android Studio. I'm using Android Studio 2.3.3.
When compiling the Android Project, I encountered this error:
error: error.NonExistentClass
The error appears when
:app:kaptDebugKotlin
is performed and caused by the dagger class cannot found, the class is defined in the other project. What can be the possible workaround for this? Sorry for my bad English.
Upvotes: 87
Views: 91921
Reputation: 11
I encountered the same problem. In my case, I was adding dependencies in the wrong order, first the module that used the interface implementation and then the module that implemented this interface. That is, I called @Inject before creating @Module.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1184
here it started, after I removed these implementations
testImplementation 'junit:junit:4.13.2'
androidTestImplementation 'androidx.test.ext:junit:1.1.5'
androidTestImplementation 'androidx.test.espresso:espresso-core:3.5.1'
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2019
I encountered this error when I had a class with the same name on another module. This other class was not created using Dagger/Hilt.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 50
The problem for me was forgetting to import the annotation.
Adding @EnableBatchProcessing without any import incurred that problem :)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 113
If anyone still having issue. Check this link out
androidComponents {
onVariants(selector().all(), { variant ->
afterEvaluate {
// This is a workaround for https://issuetracker.google.com/301244513 which depends on internal
// implementations of the android gradle plugin and the ksp gradle plugin which might change in the future
// in an unpredictable way.
project.tasks.getByName("ksp" + variant.name.capitalize() + "Kotlin") {
def buildConfigTask = (com.android.build.gradle.tasks.GenerateBuildConfig) project.tasks.getByName("generate" + variant.name.capitalize() + "BuildConfig")
((org.jetbrains.kotlin.gradle.tasks.AbstractKotlinCompileTool) it).setSource(
buildConfigTask.sourceOutputDir
)
}
}
})
}
Add this at the end of app level build.gradle file.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 991
Its a compilation sync issue.
Do
./gradlew clean build
or
invalidate cache and restart
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1799
ERROR : error.NonExistentClass
This means there is a problem with providing dependencies( and not the dependency itself!).
Sometimes annotation processor(in this case Dagger) is unable to build dependency graph on the first build iteration due to a provider absence.
For instance: You are passing GlideApp as a parameter in your provider while GlideApp class is not generated yet! So, watch out for your providers for NonExistentClass
errors.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 556
For all those arriving like me on this topic with a similar error.
Check your annotation imports.
For me the problem was I had the @MicronautTest
annotation same as another test just the wrong one. Somehow intellij seems to think the import is fine while it really is not.
I had
import io.micronaut.test.extensions.junit5.annotation.MicronautTest
yet needed the kotest one.
import io.micronaut.test.extensions.kotest.annotation.MicronautTest
The kapt error is, while technically correct, quite uninformative. So just check the imports and if they are all correct.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 28865
After removing the outdated library
implementation 'androidx.hilt:hilt-lifecycle-viewmodel:1.0.0-alpha03'
kapt 'androidx.hilt:hilt-compiler:1.0.0-alpha03'
I got this error:
incompatible types: NonExistentClass cannot be converted to Annotation
Looking at https://dagger.dev/hilt/view-model.html I changed in a ViewModel
:
class MainViewModel @ViewModelInject constructor(
...
) : ViewModel() {
to
@HiltViewModel
class MainViewModel @Inject constructor(
...
) : ViewModel() {
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 76
I had similar issues with dagger. Adding the following helped solve it :
// dagger
implementation dep('com.google.dagger:dagger')
implementation dep('com.google.dagger:dagger-android-support')
implementation dep('com.spotify.dagger.android:dagger')
kapt dep('com.google.dagger:dagger-android-processor')
kapt dep('com.google.dagger:dagger-compiler')
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1919
Just add this to build gradle file to avoid the issues related NonExistentClass
kapt {
correctErrorTypes true
}
https://kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/kapt.html#non-existent-type-correction
Upvotes: 116
Reputation: 799
I've found if you're using
kapt {
generateStubs = true
}
changing to false will then present the actual error, you will probably have issues building the Dagger Graph once it's compilation issues have been corrected, but simply change back to true, and you should be good
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1951
I had a project with Dagger injecting something into Presenters
At one moment I got a persistent
"NonExistentClass.java:3: error: error.NonExistentClass must be INTERFACE"
error
The root cause was trivial: a rogue copy of the valid @Inject annotated file with unsatisfied dependencies somehow slipped into the project. How can we find it? The project in Android Studio looks OK.
Look at the error message, it looks like:
/home/alex/AndroidProvects/TopProject/app/build/tmp/kapt3/stubs/onlineDebug/error/NonExistentClass.java:3: error: error.NonExistentClass must be INTERFACE public final class NonExistentClass {
Search at the compiled by kapt build files in
/home/alex/AndroidProvects/TopProject/app/build/tmp/kapt3/stubs/onlineDebug
/app for "NonExistentClass" string
You will find the exact file with the exact unsatisfied Dagger dependency (in my case it was a rogue orphan file in the place where it shouldn't exist)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 979
I received this error, when there was a compilation error in my Injected class. Please ensure that there aren't any compilation errors.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 462
I got this error when I had moved by mistake a test class into my main sourceset. Moving it back to the test sourceset got rid of the error.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 51
It seems kapt cannot find the class, or cannot determine which class to use. e.g.
import foo.* // class foo.Abc
import bar.* // annotation bar.Abc
@Abc
class Xyz { ... }
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 19270
In my case, I had @Nullable
annotation from support-annotations while I had removed it in order to migrate to AndroidX
.
When building, because the annotation was not imported correctly, it was detected as invalid.
What I did was to check the code and fix all imports.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 5061
If you come across this problem after Android X migration and start loosing your mind here is one thing you can try.
Our project had few modules in it, lets call one of them myModuleProject
.
After migration to Android X it was compiling and running fine if I run it from android studio, but when code moved to cloud and CI starts build, it was failing with ':myModuleProject:kaptDebugKotlin'
and with long list of errors such as
e: /home/circleci/code/myModuleProject/build/tmp/kapt3/stubs/debug/package_name_here/reporter/bindingadapter/SomeBindingAdapterKt.java:14: error: incompatible types: NonExistentClass cannot be converted to Annotation
@error.NonExistentClass()
After two days of nightmare I found that not only root project gradle.properties
but also module projects should include following!
android.databinding.enableV2=true
android.useAndroidX=true
android.enableJetifier=true
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 3207
It appeared the errors after I upgraded the .gradle version.
Upgraded the version for mockito from 2.7.21 to 2.+ fixed the issue for me.
- androidTestCompile "org.mockito:mockito-android:2.7.21" // remove this
+ androidTestCompile "org.mockito:mockito-android:2.+" // add this
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 47
I had the same issue recently. As I sometimes commit through the Android Studio (3.4.c6) I use the "Optimize imports" option to remove unused imports. For some reason, it removed the import for the Parcelize annotation.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 5375
I had a very similar situation with a NonExistentClass
error in a multi-module project using Dagger and turns out I forgot to add the kotlin library dependency. So, just adding it in the sub-module solved my problem:
implementation "org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-stdlib-jdk7:$rootProject.kotlinVersion"
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 8495
tldr: Change kapt to annotationProcessor in build.gradle and you will see the real problem.
I got the same error, and it turned out that I just commented out a class that I was using in my AppComponent. Unfortunately the kapt tool didn't give me the proper error message. If you change the kapt to annotationProcessor at your library's compiler, and try to build, it won't succeed neither, but you will get a more detailed error message.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 2204
Basically, there's not much that can be done to fix this when using kapt
. To quote this link that tackles the same problem in another library that uses pre-processors (OrmaDatabase):
Because Kotlin makes its stubs before Java Annotation Processing runs, Kotlin knows just nothing about OrmaDatabase, and the name of the declaration in stubs will be error.NonExistentClass. This breaks the Annotation Processing tool. It's a kind of kapt limitation
Just use plain apt
or annotationProcessor
for running Dagger compiler. As soon as I changed:
kapt libs.daggerCompiler
to
annotationProcessor libs.daggerCompiler
in my module level build.gradle
file, I was able to get the errors. After you've fixed the errors, you gotta revert the line back to kapt
because otherwise dagger classes wouldn't be generated since they're defined in Kotlin.
Upvotes: 52
Reputation: 4863
It seems, there is a bug with kapt, project cleaning should help.
./gradlew clean
Upvotes: 1